The Golden State Warriors have yet to officially decide whether they’ll visit the White House to be honored for winning the NBA championship Monday night, multiple sources close to the team have told The Chronicle.

“They just won the title,” one source said. “When could they have even had time to have that discussion?”

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Whether Golden State would visit President Donald Trump’s White House was a much-discussed topic on social media in the wake of the Warriors winning their second NBA title in three years Monday.

Two reporters, citing no sources, tweeted shortly after Golden State’s Game 5 win over the Cavaliers that the team had “unanimously” decided to boycott an invitation to meet President Trump at the White House.

Though Warriors sources have refuted those reports, there is reason to believe Golden State players — many of whom have publicly derided President Trump’s administration — wouldn’t want to attend the White House.

In fact, backup point guard Shaun Livingston even said during a radio interview in February that he “definitely wouldn’t go” to the White House if the Warriors won the championship. Golden State head coach Steve Kerr, one of the most politically conscious coaches in professional sports, has said that President Trump’s immigration ban is “against the principles of what our country is about.”

After Under Armour CEO Kevin Plank said in February that having a pro-business president like Trump is “a real asset to our country,” two-time reigning NBA MVP Stephen Curry told the Bay Area News Group that “I agree with that description, if you remove the ‘et.’” Backup power forward David West has called Trump’s election “unnerving and unsettling.”